SALT LAKE CITY — The arena was empty and the morning was awakening as Bingham took the floor at the Huntsman Center on Tuesday, and like a youngster before milk and cartoons, the Miners were zonked.

“We’ve never played that early before. We woke up the same time we do for school, but we’ve never played that early,” explained Bingham guard Kyle Gearig.

Before the Miners had an opportunity to rub their eyes open, they were clinging to a one-point lead at halftime against West in the 5A basketball tournament. The slow start provided the wake-up call they needed, and in the second half Bingham sleepwalked to a 73-42 win.

“I don’t know if we did anything differently other than our approach was a lot better,” Bingham first-year coach Jake Schroeder said. “We came out with a little more energy and a little more effort on the defensive end.”

Bingham outscored the Panthers 45-17 in the second half with the majority of the damage inflicted at the free-throw line (22-of-28). The Miners increased their efficiency from the floor from 30 percent to 59 in the second half while outrebounding West 21-12.

“We knew that we could come back and not let them keep that up in the second half,” said Bingham sophomore Yoeli Childs, who provided a 10-point spark in the final two quarters after missing his first four attempts.

“We always try to go through him whether it’s for him to score or kick out. Our offense runs through him, and there’s pressure on him being a sophomore,” Schroeder said. “The part I was frustrated with in the first half is West did a good job of getting him off the block. We made a big effort to get the ball inside in the key, and when he gets the ball down there, he’s pretty good.”

Each time Bingham appeared to gain separation in the first half, West answered with a 3-point play — one by Riley Kenner and the other by Dallyn Kenner. Eventually Kiley Kenner connected on wing with four seconds remaining in the half to pull his team within one, 27-26.

“(Riley Kenner) had 13 points in the second quarter,” Gearig said. “So that was our main focus, shutting him down. I think we did that really well."

Schroeder added, “In the first half we kind of sagged off and let him do whatever he wanted, so we said, ‘We’ll take something away, and if he beats us he beats us.’ It worked out for us.”

The defensive adjustment left West searching for points while Bingham utilized Jordan Evans, who has experienced roller-coaster stretches after fracturing his hand earlier this season. He finished with 13 points, including a five-point burst with 30 seconds in the third to give Bingham a 49-33 advantage.

“He can score in a variety of ways,” Schroeder said of Evans. “When we can get out and get him the ball in the open area, he does a good job of getting to the hole. He did a good job of hitting the open shots.”

The Miners will now face three-time defending champion Lone Peak on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Huntsman Center.

“We know that we’re going in as the underdog,” Schroeder said. “To win three in a row like they have — they’re obviously the team to beat. We’re going to try and get a game plan together, and I think if we defend and play how we play — you never know. All we want is a shot.”

Trevor Phibbs is a reporter who joined the Deseret News in 2008. He currently is the Weber State beat writer and also covers high school athletics and the Utah Blaze. Phibbs was raised in Sandy, Utah where he graduated more ..